Yes. For example, place the 6 as the base, and the 3 and 4 sloping up from that base.
3
The 3 sides have different lengths
No, it is not possible to build a triangle with side lengths of 3, 3, and 9. According to the triangle inequality theorem, the sum of the lengths of any two sides must be greater than the length of the third side. In this case, 3 + 3 is not greater than 9, so these side lengths cannot form a triangle.
Scalene triangle
It is a scalene triangle.
3
A scalene triangle has 3 sides of different lengths An isosceles triangle has 2 sides of equal lengths An equilateral triangle has 3 sides of equal lengths
That depends on what the side lengths are. Until the side lengths are known, the triangle can only be classified as a triangle.
Yes, an isosceles triangle with two size lengths of 3 and one of 8 :)
An isosceles triangle has 3 sides 2 of which are equal in lengths An equilateral triangle has 3 sides all of which are equal in lengths
The 3 sides have different lengths
Scalene triangle
scalene triangle.
It is a scalene triangle.
If its a right angle triangle then its side lengths could be 3, 4 and 5
Yes, sides of those lengths (in the same units) do.
Draw a right angled triangle with legs of lengths 2 and 3 units. The hypotenuse will be sqrt(13) units.